University of Exeter recommendations find practical principles to encourage transparency and prevent greenwashing in financial sector

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It is hoped the recommendations will lead to enhanced governance and genuine and lasting improvements in securities finance.

The principles say securities finance initiatives should be transparent in terms of roles and
responsibilities relating to liquidity.

Organisations should demonstrate the genuine and impactful implementation of their ESG/sustainable finance credentials as part of collaborations and partnerships to mitigate any attempts at greenwashing.

The recommendations were developed byDr Radek Stech from the University of Exeter Law School. They were subject to several rounds of peer review by senior experts, including UN reviewers, in sustainable finance, securities finance and interrelated fields.

The aim of the principles is to bring about lasting improvements in securities finance and identify common goals, conflicts of interests and ways of working together through collaborations and partnerships.

The principles were developed as part of the research-driven Global Principles for Sustainable Securities Lending (Global PSSL), which has been co-created by Dr Stech, prominent asset owners, asset managers, sovereign wealth funds, banks, hedge funds other stakeholders committed to positive change since 2018. It benefited from significant funding from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).

It is hoped the principles will encourage partnerships between stakeholders who are willing to be transparent about their public, private and polycentric interests in securities finance.

This enhanced governance should build upon the existing web of interactions and governance and rely on a balanced use of regulation, principles, voluntary guidelines, regulatory supervision, and access to data with technological innovation.

The principles will help companies wishing to enter into transparent collaborations to be more open with regard to their roles and responsibilities. These boundaries are difficult to draw, given that some public goods are provided by private or semi-private entities.